Thursday, July 9, 2015

Event Update For 2015-07-08

The seas, lakes and oceans are now pluming deadly hydrogen sulfide and suffocating methane. Hydrogen sulfide is a highly toxic water-soluble heavier-than-air gas and will accumulate in low-lying areas. Methane is slightly more buoyant than normal air and so will be all around, but will tend to contaminate our atmosphere from the top down. These gases are sickening and killing oxygen-using life all around the world, including human life, as our atmosphere is increasingly poisoned. Because both gases are highly flammable and because our entire civilization is built around fire and flammable fuels, this is leading to more fires and explosions. This is an extinction level event and will likely decimate both the biosphere and human population and it is debatable whether humankind can survive this event.

A. More fires and more explosions, especially along the coasts, but everywhere generally.
B. Many more animal die-offs, of all kinds, and especially oceanic species.
C. More multiples of people will be found dead in their homes, as if they'd dropped dead.
D. More corpses found in low-lying areas, all over the world.
E. More unusual vehicular accidents.
F. Improved unemployment numbers as people die off.

Quote: "Imagine looking out of a plane’s window during takeoff and seeing an engine catch fire. That’s what happened to a Boston-bound Southwest Airlines flight at Chicago’s Midway International Airport Wednesday night."

Quote: "The blast was so powerful that the roof of the house came down and the iron doors landed several metres away. A forensic team reached the site around 1 am and collected samples. Initially it was believed that the cooking gas cylinder in the house exploded. But police soon found the cylinder intact with gas still."

Quote: "A man threw his dog overboard and leapt from the boat where he lived after it exploded and burst into flames off Outer Harbor on Wednesday. Tony Walsh, 61, suffered a burn to the elbow during the fire, which destroyed his 30ft timber cabin cruiser in waters off Outer Harbor about 4.30pm on Wednesday."

Quote: "The trucks and trailer were parked roadside in Beach Rd, Dargaville. Firefighters were called to the blaze about 12.45am yesterday. Dargaville's Deputy Chief Fire Officer Michael Ross said all three rigs were well ablaze when they arrived and there was nothing that they could do but hose them down."

Quote: "MCPAWS Regional Animal Shelter in McCall warned the public on Facebook on Wednesday that the dog might have died from an algae bloom on popular Payette Lake. But a senior watershed analyst for the Idaho Department of Environmental Quality said Thursday that she found no evidence of a bloom, or high concentration of the algae, where the dog had been drinking the water — near the boat launch at Ponderosa State Park."

Note: Lot of people dying after contact with water - or just proximity to water - these days too. Hydrogen sulfide is water-soluble and it's a heavier-than-air gas that tends to end up in all the same places that water does...

Quote: "Authorities say it appears Gillespie may have had some medical or weather-related issues while hiking, and it's possible Miller went looking for help. The boy reportedly had the car keys with him. No foul play is suspected in their deaths."

Quote: "Eastern Cape health emergency services are rushing to East London airport where a small aircraft has crashed, critically injuring two adults, and three children have also sustained injuries in the crash..."

Quote: "On July 8, 2015, at 5 a.m. a crew member of the 'Penn Kalet' was medevaced by helicopter and taken to the hospital of Caen. The fisherman had lost consciousness, and at 2:30 a.m. the CROSS Jobourg coordinated a rescue operation 30 miles east of Saint-Vaast-La-Hougue, after consulting the maritime medical coordination center."

Note: I read a science fiction novel in the 1970s or 1980s that postulated EXACTLY this method of propulsion: using lasers to hit chunks of deuterium and tritium, causing small nuclear explosions. Boeing has added a twist, in that their engine uses the resulting heat to power the lasers. I think the novel was The Jupiter Theft, from 1977, by Donald Moffitt. He died in 2014 so he didn't get to see the very propulsion method he postulated getting patented by Boeing. Dredging this book up from my memory banks was no easy task - that was 38 years ago!